Go See the Doctor

1986 single by Kool Moe Dee From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Go See the Doctor" is a song by American rapper Kool Moe Dee. It was released in 1986 as the first single from his eponymous debut album. Originally released by Rooftop, it was later reissued by Jive.[2]

B-side"Monster Crack"
Released1986
Recorded1986
Quick facts Single by Kool Moe Dee, from the album Kool Moe Dee ...
"Go See the Doctor"
Single by Kool Moe Dee
from the album Kool Moe Dee
B-side"Monster Crack"
Released1986
Recorded1986
GenreGolden age hip hop
Length3:57
Label
  • Rooftop (original)
  • Jive (reissue)
SongwriterMohandas Dewese[1]
Producers
Kool Moe Dee singles chronology
"Turn It Up"
(1985)
"Go See the Doctor"
(1986)
"Rock Steady"
(1987)
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Produced by Kool Moe Dee himself with Lavaba and Teddy Riley, the song has messages of the prevention of sexually transmitted infections.[3]

"Go See the Doctor" became Kool Moe Dee's first single to appear on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number 89 in April 1987 and staying on the chart for five weeks.[4] It also peaked at number seven on the Belgian Ultratop (Flanders), number three on the Dutch Nationale Hitparade and number 82 on the UK Singles Chart, being his single with the highest impact outside the United States.

Bruce Pollock listed the song in his book Rock Song Index: The 7500 Most Important Songs for the Rock and Roll Era (2005)[5]

Conception and composition

During an interview in June 1987, Kool Moe Dee commented on "Go See the Doctor":

As an artist I have the attention of a lot of the younger kids. It’s a duty to say something worthwhile, rather than just get up and talk about sneakers and dancing all the time. Rap is an album market now rather than just a singles market, so you have the opportunity to branch out a little. You can expand and really talk about more things in depth, including lots of social issues."[6]

The song, which Los Angeles Times described as "a story, in explicit language, of the contraction and consequences of a sexually transmitted disease", aroused controversy in the United States, but was used in a public service announcement in Germany.[6]

In a later interview Kool Moe Dee stated that "Go See the Doctor" was "the hardest thing I had to do in my career":

I knew I was making a formula record, and I was about to make a killing; but I will lose all my reputation on the lyricist side. I knew that "Go See the Doctor" would blow because I had dumbed it down."[7]

Among the song's producers was Teddy Riley, who at that time was 18 years old and had previously worked on the Doug E. Fresh hit "The Show".

Samples

The song contains a sample of James Brown's "Funky Drummer" (In an interview with Vibe in 2012 Teddy Riley declared about this time that "Between me and Marley Marl, we were the first to sample James Brown").[8] The song also interpolates Hank Williams's "Hey, Good Lookin'".

Legacy and influence

Hip hop magazine Ego Trip included "Go See the Doctor" on in its list of the Greatest Hip-Hop Singles of 1986.[9]

Bruce Pollock listed the song in his book Rock Song Index: The 7500 Most Important Songs for the Rock and Roll Era (2005) for "instructive editorial in the era of AIDS".[5]

Appearances

Track listing

A-side

  1. "Go See the Doctor" (Almost Clean) (Radio Version) (3:57)
  2. "Go See the Doctor" (Uncensored) (3:57)

B-side

  1. "Monster Crack" (Street Mix) (5:27)
  2. "Monster Crack (Radio Edit) (3:50)

Charts

More information Chart (1987), Peak position ...
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References

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